State v. . Morgan

25 N.C. 186
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 25 N.C. 186 (State v. . Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Morgan, 25 N.C. 186 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

Gaston, J.

Two questions are presented for our consideration on this special verdiet, and for the purpose of per-specuity it is necessary that they should be examined separately. The first is, whether the defendant committed an as - sauit-; and the second, if he did., whether that assault was justified as having been committed in the rightful defence of his property.

' Upon the first question, this court entertains the same opinion, which was expressed in the Superior Court. There are several ancient cases in which it was held, that an assault might be committed by threats of future violence ; but it has long been settled, that words alone cannot constitute an assault. They may endanger the public peace, but do not break it. There is no assault, unless there be some act, amounting to an attempt or offer to commit personal violence. The instances usually given of such attempts or offers to do wrong to the person of another, are “ by the striking at him with or without a weapon, or presenting a gun at him within a distance which the gun will carry, or pointing a pitch-fork at him standing within the reach of it, or by holding up one’s fist at him in an angry threatening manner.” 1 Hawk. c. 15. The law regards these acts as breaches of the peace, because they directly invade that personal security, which the law guaranties to every citizen.— They do not excite an apprehension that his person may be attacked on a future occasion, and thus authorize a resort to cautionary remedies against it; but they are the beginnings of an attack, excite terror of immediate personal harm or *189 disgrace, and justify a resort to actual violence to repel the impending injury and insult. But even acts, which facie and unexplained are undoubtedly assaults, like other acts which are not unequivocal in their character, may be shewn to be in truth different from what they purport to be; that they are not attempts or offers to do harm, but merely angry gestures without any accompanying purpose of mischief. The attending circumstances may plainly shew this, and, among other circumstances, the declarations of the party at the time, inasmuch as such declarations are ordinarily indicative of the party’s purpose, are very proper to be considered and weighed. The ordinary illustration of the doctrine, that a seeming assault may be explained away by the declarations of the supposed assailant, is the very familiar case, where a man laid his hand on his sword and said to the person, with whom he was quarrelling, “if it were not assise time, I would not take such language from you.” There is also an illustration of it in the case of the State v Crow, 1 Ired. Rep. 375, where the defendant, when he raised the whip, used the words, “ if you were not an old man, I would knock you down.” In both it was held to be a fair subject of enquiry, whether, at the time these acts were done, there was a present purpose of doing harm, and that, if there was not, the acts did not amount to an assault. But these, and all the cases within our recollection where this doctrine has been held, were cases, in which there was a declared intent not to do harm at the time. The present case is one of a very different character. The act was not only apparently a most dangerous assault, but accompanied with a present purpose to do great bodily harm ; and the only declaration, by which its character is attempted to be changed, is, that the assailant was not determined to execute his savage purpose unconditionally and without a moment’s delay. He had commenced the attack and raised the deadly weapon and was in the attitude to strike, but suspended the blow, to afford the object of his vengeance an opportunity to buy his safety, by compliance with the defendant’s terms. To hold that such an act, under such circumstances, was not an offer of violence — not an attempt to commit violence, would *190 be, we think, to outrage principle and manifest an utter want of that solicitude for the preservation of peace, which characterizes our law, and which should animate its administra-iors- To every purpose — both in fact and in law — the attack on the prosecutor was begun — and in the pause, which intervened before its consummation, most happily.for both parties an arrangement was made, which prevented the probably fatal result. But this pause — though intentional, and announced when the attack began — does not prevent that attack from being an offer or attempt to strike. If a ruffian were to level his rifle at a traveller, and announce to him that he might have fifteen minutes to make his peace with his'God — and the unfortunate man should save his life by prayers, by remonstrance, by money, or by any other means before the expiration of that time, could it be pretended that there had been no attempt nor offer to hurt him, because the intent was not to kill instantaneously, and therefore did not accompany the act? Will it be doubted, if a bully should present his pistol at a 'citizen and order him, under pain of ■death, not to walk on the same side of the street with him, whether there was an offer of violence, because the purpose to kill was not absolute but conditional merely ? Wherever the act is done in fart execution of a purpose of violence — whether that purpose be absolute or provisional — makes no •difference as respects the question, whether the act be an assault. In both cases the assailant equally violates the public peace. In both he breaks down the barrier which the law has erected for the security of the citizen. In the former he sets •up none in its place. In the latter, he substitutes for it the protection of his grace and favor.

Upon the second question, the opinion of this court differs from that of the Superior Court. If an assault be committed, but it is done in the lawful defence of one’s person or property; the defendant cannot, in a civil action, give this justification in evidence under the plea of not guilty, but must set it Forth to be judged of by the court by a special plea. The act done was in law an assault, notwithstanding it was rightfully done. His plea therefore confesses the assault charged in the declaration, but avers that the plaintiff *191 •cannot maintain an action therefor, because of the special circumstances rendering the ;.ct, complained of, one, the defendant might of right do. But upon an indictment for an assault, the traverser may, under the plea of not guilty, shew any matter of justification. There can be no of-fence against the community, where the accused has done no more than the law sanctions, and it is most convenient for the accused generally, that they should not be tied down to the strict rules of pleading. But in criminal, as in civil cases, if there be an assault, it cannot be justified other than by shewing specially all the circumstances which render the act rightful; and the sufficiency of the alleged justification is a matter of law. The defendant in this case is guilty of an assault, unless the facts found by the verdict, make up a legal justification. In the judgment of this court, they do not.

In the verdict it is found that the gun, which the constable seized under they?, fa. against the goods of the defendant, was his

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.C. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morgan-nc-1842.